PAGE 11
Damned If You Don’t
by
“How’s everything, Mr. Bending?” he asked with cordial geniality.
“Fine, Mr. Trask,” Bending answered automatically. “And you?”
“Reasonable, reasonable. I hear you had the police out your way this morning.” There was a questioning look in his round blue eyes. “No trouble, I hope.”
Sam understood the question behind the statement. Vernon Trask was the go-between for some of the biggest black market operators in the country. Bending didn’t like to have to deal with him, but one had very little choice these days.
“No. No trouble. Burglary in the night. Someone opened my safe and picked up a few thousand dollars, is all.”
“I see.” Trask was obviously wondering whether some black market operator would be approached by a couple of burglars in the next few days–a couple of burglars trying to peddle apparatus and equipment that had been stolen from Bending. There still were crooks who thought that the black market dealt in stolen goods of that sort.
“Some of my instruments were smashed,” Bending said, “but none of them are missing.”
“I’m glad to hear that,” Trask said. And Bending knew he meant it. The black market boys didn’t like to have their customers robbed of scientific equipment; it might reflect back on them. “I just thought I’d explain about missing our appointment this morning,” Trask went on. “It was unavoidable; something unexpected came up.”
Trask was being cagey, as always. He didn’t talk directly, even over a phone that wasn’t supposed to be tapped. Bending understood, though. Some of the robotics equipment he’d contracted to get from Trask was supposed to have been delivered that morning, but when the delivery agent had seen the police car out front, he’d kept right on going naturally enough.
“That’s all right, Mr. Trask,” Bending said. “What with all this trouble this morning, it actually slipped my mind. Another time, perhaps.”
Trask nodded. “I’ll try to make arrangements for a later date. Thanks a lot, Mr. Bending. Good-by.”
Bending said good-by and cut the connection.
Samson Bending didn’t like being forced to buy from the black market operators, but there was nothing else to do if one wanted certain pieces of equipment. During the “Tense War” of the late Sixties, the Federal and State governments had gone into a state of near-panic. The war that had begun in the Near East had flashed northwards to ignite the eternal Powder Keg of Europe. But there were no alliances, no general war; there were only periodic armed outbreaks, each one in turn threatening to turn into World War III. Each country found itself agreeing to an armistice with one country while trying to form an alliance with a second and defending itself from or attacking a third.
And yet, during it all, no one quite dared to use the Ultimate Weapons. There was plenty of strafing by fighter planes and sorties by small bomber squadrons, but there was none of the “massive retaliation” of World War II. There could be heard the rattle of small-arms fire and the rumble of tanks and the roar of field cannon, but not once was there the terrifying, all-enveloping blast of nuclear bombs.
But, at the time, no one knew that it wouldn’t happen. The United States and the Soviet Union hovered on the edges of the war, two colossi who hesitated to interfere directly for fear they would have to come to grips with each other.
The situation made the “Brinksmanship” of former Secretary Dulles look as safe as loafing in an easy-chair.
And the bureaucratic and legislative forces of the United States Government had reacted in a fairly predictable manner. The “security” guards around scientific research, which had been gradually diminishing towards the vanishing point, had suddenly been re-imposed–this time, even more stringently and rigidly than ever before.
Coupled with this was another force–apparently unrelated–which acted to tie in with the Federal security regulations. The juvenile delinquent gangs had begun to realize the value of science. Teen-age hoodlums armed with homemade pistols were dangerous enough in the Fifties; add aimed rockets and remote-control bombs to their armories, and you have an almost uncontrollable situation. Something had to be done, and various laws controlling the sale of scientific apparatus had been passed by the fifty states. And–as with their liquor and divorce laws–no two of the states had the same set of laws, and no one of them was without gaping flaws.